Literature DB >> 7536612

Beta-adrenergic modulation of currents produced by rat cardiac Na+ channels expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes.

W Schreibmayer1, B Frohnwieser, N Dascal, D Platzer, B Spreitzer, R Zechner, R G Kallen, H A Lester.   

Abstract

In Xenopus oocytes coexpressing beta 2-adrenergic receptors and the rat cardiac alpha SkM2 Na+ channel, superfusion with 10 microM isoproterenol led to modest (approximately 30%) increases in peak Na+ inward current. Intracellular injection of cAMP and of protein kinase A (PKA) catalytic subunit reproduced this increase, showing that the second messenger pathway involves PKA dependent phosphorylation. Coexpression of the Na+ channel beta 1 subunit had no influence on the modulation. The modulation had little or no effect upon Na+ current waveforms, steady-state activation, steady-state activation, steady-state inactivation, or recovery from both fast and slow inactivation; but maximum Na+ conductance was increased. Mutation of the five major consensus PKA phosphorylation sites on alpha SkM2 did not abolish the observed effect. In parallel experiments, beta-adrenergic stimulation of the neuronal alpha IIA Na+ channel subunit led to an attenuation of Na+ current. It is concluded that (i) the alpha SkM2 subunit might be directly phosphorylated by PKA, but at serine/threonine residue(s) in a cryptic phosphorylation site(s); or that (ii) the modulation might also be mediated by phosphorylation of another, as yet unknown protein(s). The divergent modulation of neuronal and cardiac Na+ channel alpha-subunits suggests that differential physiological modulation by identical second messenger pathways is the evolutionary basis for the isoform diversity within this protein family.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7536612

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Receptors Channels        ISSN: 1060-6823


  12 in total

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2.  Modulation of the human cardiac sodium channel alpha-subunit by cAMP-dependent protein kinase and the responsible sequence domain.

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Authors:  B Frohnwieser; L Weigl; W Schreibmayer
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6.  Modulation of rat cardiac sodium channel by the stimulatory G protein alpha subunit.

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Review 9.  Post-translational modifications of the cardiac Na channel: contribution of CaMKII-dependent phosphorylation to acquired arrhythmias.

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10.  Impaired slow inactivation due to a polymorphism and substitutions of Ser-906 in the II-III loop of the human Nav1.4 channel.

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